Monday, 27 January 2014

A week or so ago,
German Chancellor Angela Merkel said that Europe has “just over 7 per cent of the world’s
population, produces around 25 per cent of global GDP and has to finance 50 per
cent of global social spending”.

The implication
was clear – this is a gap which is unaffordable and needs to be closed.It’s the sort of view which one would expect
from a conservative politician – and it has echoes in the messages from the
three mainstream conservative parties in the UK.

I seem to
remember that the leader of the (nominally communist) People’s Republic of
China also said something not dissimilar a few months ago; Western benefits payments
are too generous.

With a gap of
this nature exists, however, there are always two ways of closing it.Increasing the welfare bill in the poorest
countries has the same effect on that gap as does reducing the bill in the
richest.The fact that only one of those
options ever seems to be suggested by our leaders is instructive – it suggests
an acceptance that the “norm” should be closer to what happens elsewhere than to what happens here.But why do we let
them get away with that?